Accounting, financing, investing… All these things have many concepts in common, and while many principles make common sense, some others require a bit of education. For example, most people have no clue that underallocated overhead occurs when you spend more than what you plan.
In theory, the idea is fairly simple to understand – there is nothing to be concerned about. However, as you dig deeper, you realize this concept goes way further than that. In fact, it can make things quite complicated too.
Generally speaking, applied overheads represent the total of actual overhead costs that are not normally allocated in the first place. Basically, whatever you planned for the production does not work, and you end up spending more...